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Chicago examiner vol xii no 77 a m saturday Chicago march 21 1914 saturday registered ln v s patent office price one cent jjs&ftÃŸff cabman says he hauled mrs hemmen into country she told him to wait and then disappeared into a deep ravine and failed to return driver tells waukegan police recognizes missing woman's picture in examiner woods searched by lantern light husband offers 100 reward for the first time since the widespread search for mrs job hemmen wife of a photographer of waukegan 111 began after her disappearance last tuesday fl tangible clew was given yesterday that may result in disclosing her fate the clew came from james dodds a waukegan cabman who recognized a pic ture of mrs hemmcu published in the Chicago examiner and asserted positively that she was a passenger in bis cab last tuesday he said he took her at her re quest to a lonely spot northwest of thc village where she left the cab and dis appeared into a wild and wooded ravine the story of dodds roused every one ln waukegan to a keen pitch of interest to-day practically the entire population will engage in a search of the ravine und adjacent country it will be a holiday in waukegan to-day and au school chil dren will aid in the search as will mem bers of the national guard the police and hundreds of citizens additional interest was given to the search by au offer of 100 reward by mr heminen for the recovery of bis wife dead or alive anticipating the search planned for o-day mr hemmen fire chief sars o'farrell and two other waukegan citi rens last night searched the raviue with he aid of lanterns but without result tecognizes picture in examiner dodds who told his story first yester day to au examiner reporter excused his failure to speak of it before by saying that he rarely read newspapers and did not realize until he saw the picture in the examiner that the missing woman being sought was his passenger of last tuesday i was at clayton street and sheridan road at 3:30 tuesday he said when the woman i now know must have been mrs hemmen came out into the street end signalled me to stop she said she wanted me to take her to sexton's north gate one of the gates to p jl sexton's farm about a mile from the point where i met mrs hemmen i took her there end she gave me a quarter and said " stay here lor about half uu hour nnd i'll be back i want you to take me hack home sid not seem excited the woman did not appear at all ex ited or seem troubled she talked in an rdinary tone and i took the quarter and at down to wait i thought she was oing into sexton's for something but he did uot enter the farm gate she went past it and down the road 1 watched her wondering whore she was oi__.g she went down the roadway as ar as ike pyriue's spring and then turned westward and walked into a wooded ravine and disappeared behiud a clump of bushes the next day i beard that a woman was missing but i never connected this lrcumstance with my fare of the day jeforc besides i nus not feeling well and it was all i could do to work i did not hear the name of the woman wednes day and it was not until i picked up the examiner to-day and saw mrs ileminen's icture that i knew my passenger of i'uesday must be she i don't believe here is any doubt to-morrow 1 will take the police to the poiut where she disappeared 14 claim 90 found flying about in loop fourteen persons claim uo found wednesday at randolph and state â– streets and turned over to city cus | todian cregicr as a result mr cregler i has appealed to corporation counsel sex " ton foi help i carried 127 ln my handkerchief bald mrs murthu neville of 3328 west m thirty-seventh place i blew my nose r and the money went up in the air she and the other thirteen were re ferred to the corporation counsel miss pankhurst talks from an ambulance special cable to the examiner london march 20 sylvia pankhurst appeared at a su_frai_et meeting to-night nd was enthusiastically received she joked pale and haggard and was forceil to remain on a cot iu an ambulance while rihe delivered her speech ln the liinehousc district the militant was attended by two nurses one of whom administered stimulants to miss rant-hurst before and after the speech prince troubetski dying in poverty forgotten by family is starving in berlin sp?sia cable to the examiner berlin march 20 prince zubel troubclski a revolutionary scion of one of the oldest and most distinguished euro pean families is dying here of con sumption he is forgotten by his rela tives and friends und for weeks has been living here under an assumed name he is now practically penniless and fre quently suffers from lack of food he is a cousin of prince paul troubetskl the famous sculptor who is now in the united states and of prince rierrc troubetskl a fnmous painter eliot 80 spends day at work in his study reception for relatives marks birthday of ex-head of harvard boston mass march 20 dr charles w eliot president emeritus of harvard university eighty years old to-day ob served the anniversary by holding a re ception for relatives in his borne in cam bridge mrs eliot who received mes sages of congratulation throughout the day said her husband was well that be would spend the day at home and that he was busy in his study as is bis custom when home alabama governor accused of graft convicted prison official says o'neil got 27,500 of loot montgomery ala march 20.â€”theo dore lacy convicted of embezzling state i funds while in the employ of the state â– convict department issued a statement : to-day invol-lng governor o'neil mr oakley president of the convict board did give me 27,500 in cash in may or june 1911 the statement reads ; governor o'neil got that 27,500 irom me that day governor o'neil never re ; turned this money or any other money j as far as i know hattie johnson once opera star dies was member of famous mccall or ganization 25 years ago milford mass march 20 marie lansen sixty-five years old comic opera favorite of twenty-five years ago died to day at the home of her brother-in-law after a brief illness she was known on the stage as hattie johnson she was born in boston and was a popular mem ber of the famous mccall organization with francis wilson dewolf hopper ferugini de angelis and herbert wilke bavaria government boycotts standard oil special cable to the examiner berlin march 20 the bavarian gov ernment has boycotted the standard oil company by forbidding the use of the oil manufactured and sold by the trust in i any automobile owned or used by the government or for any other purpose all government departments must return sworn statements monthly that they have not used auj of the standard oil com pany's products dr shaw challenges men to go to mexico new york march 20 why don't men go down to mexico and recover the mutilated bodies desecrated by the mexi cans asked dr anna 11 shaw to-night in a suffrage meeting at erasmus hall high school flatbush dr shaw put her question after saying one of the main arguments against woman suffrage was that women lacked fighting intel lect husband hurls acid 0n wife ends own life i jeweler drinks acid on street car and crowd watches dying struggle woman runs to hospital attacked when she refused tc return home after being separated walter r karant former owner of a jewelry store at 3225 armitage avenue committed suicide last night on an ogden avenue car by swallowing sulphuric acid he killed himself after throwing the contents of a bottle of acid into the face of his wife ljurning her so badly i that she may lose the sight of both of her eyes karant and bis wife have been scp aratcd for two mouths he met her by i appointment last night at the corner of j lincoln street and ogden avenue and begged her to return with him to their home 1206 north homan avenue wheu mrs karant refused he pulled the bottle from his pocket and threw the contents in her face slips from seat dead mrs karant screaming with pain ran to the university hospital at dot south lincoln street karant ran into the street and boarded an ogden avenue car he walked into the car and sat down wheu the car reached madison street he slipped from his seat to the floor dead karant's body was removed to the berz undertaking rooms at 1507 west madison street where his identity was established by papers in his pockets a note addressed to whom it may con cern read my wife is the cause of this she drove me to the end the police did not connect thc two tragedies until the patrol wagon which had been sent to the university hospital returned to the lake street station the police who had been sent out on this case returned with mrs karant's story wife tells of attack my husband and i separated two months ago she told them he owned a jewelry store at 3223 armitage avenue a week after our separation he sold the store i went to a rooming house at 192g west jackson boulevard where i have since lived i obtained employment ln the county hospital as a junior nurse my husband begged me repeatedly to see him but i refused until to-night he begged me to come back to him i told him i could not and that i was prepar ing to file suit for divorce he pulled a bottle from his pocket and threw the contents in my face 25,000 verdict for oscar hammerstein singer sued by impresario must pay damages for broken contract new york march 20 supreme court justice platzke to-day directed a verdict of 25,000 against florenclo constantino und in favor of oscar hammorstein hammersteln alleges that constantino broke his contract to sing exclusively for him during the seasons of 1908-10 the verdict may be increased by 5,000 if a penalty provided in the contract is en forced constantino testifed the impresario had failed to abide by his agreement to feature him constantino in certain ad vertisements he also stated hammer steln had snubbed bim when he tried to meet him ln paris and new york mile dorny nude on stage paris applauds actress then comes before curtain and s hissed special cable to the examiner paris march 20 mile dorny the actress appeared totally nude iu a pro duction ot u dramatization of pierre i.outi's aphrodite at the renaissance theater this week she did it so grace fully and with such modesty that the audience applauded Â„ after the curtain fell the applause was so great that mile dorny made the mis take of coming out before the curtain iu the same absence of costume then in stead of applause there were hisses and angry murmurings bride refused to ride husband stole rig girl taken home by parents man flees gives self up a guilty conscience and an aching heart led robert mckay of new castle pa to give himself up to the police of the cen tral station yesterday please arrest me he said to an is tonished sergeant at state and van bu ren streets i stole a horse and buggy you see i married a girl in new castle a month ago she loved mc but her father and mother interfered and took her away from me then i hired a horse and buggy to take her out riding when she refused i was so angry i sold the outfit for 13 and bought a ticket or Chicago now i want to go back mckay is being held pending confirma tion of his story ex-newsgirl sues millionaire husband bill declares frank morton bates is drug victim taunton mass march 20 mrs nan carrigan bates former newsgirl at the hotel astor new york now the wife of the millionaire jewelry manufacturer frank morton bates of attleooro has sued for divorce alleging cruelty gross and confirmed intoxication from opium und other drugs and wanton neglect when in boston on her honeymoon mrs bates declared wealth without love was empty and that she had married for love sinclair quits arden because of snubs orders bungalow sold and will stay in bermuda wilmington del march 20 upton sinclair and his second wife have left arden forever because of thc snubs tbey have received they have decided to re main in bermuda this was learned to day when the author sent orders that his bungalow ln arden be sold for the reason that i do not want to return there the snubbing followed sinclair's refusal to pay a flue for playing baseball on sunday and his consequent imprisonment henry h rogers jr charged with fraud son of late oil head accused in case of home for cripples new york march 20 the appel late division to-day declared henry h rogers jr son of the late head of the standard oil company guilty of a fraud against the messiah home for crippled children reversing justice quintan's de cision that the home in suing rogers had no case rogers fraud was in claim ing to hold a mortgage for 000,000 against the home which was given by the late mr and mrs h h rogers to the church of the messiah the matter will now go to trial alton b parker sues to recover 5,376 charges two defendants gave him worthless note for sum new york march 20 alton b park er former nominee of the democratic party for president to-day started a su preme court action to recover 5,376 from gilbert f kennedy und david kennedy parker alleges he was given a note for this amount in 1008 payable on demand the note was secured by stock in the lincoln mining company when he at tempetd to sell the security he found it bad no market value congressman tries to impeach judge lack of quorum prevents action on sensational charge washington march 20 at the mo ment of the adjournment of the house to-night representative j frank park of georgia made u vain effort to impeach associate justice daniel thew wright of the district of columbia supremo court the effort caused a sensation among the seventy-five members present park charged justice wright with high crimes and misdemeanors because of lack of a quorum the house adjourned leaving open park's resolution for action to-morrow 100 ulster officers quit wait war signal civil conflict threatens great britain in few hours 10,000 troops are rushed to scene to meet outbreak in ireland government also to send war ship fleet unionists stirred to striking point at presence of soldiers along the border special cable to the examiner belfast march 20 1 a m there is an ominous lull before the storm belfast is quiet to-night new and greatly strengthened guards of ulster volunteers have been thrown around craig-avon where sir edward carson is passing the night as the guest of captain craig m p his chief lieutenant belfast volunteers have been or dered to report themselves at their respective battalion headquarters this afternoon additional govern ment troops are arriving almost hourly from dublin no man knows what the next hour may bring special cable to the examiner london march 20 the latest report received in london to-night from ire land indicated there was practically no doubt that a most critical situation ex ists in ulster and that the next forty eight hours may make history that wilt thrill the whole civilized world the dally mail to-night received from its correspondent at the curragh of kil dare the following message all of the cavalry officers at the cur ragh garrison resigned to-day when this message was submitted to the war office an official reply was made as follows the statement ln this form is abso lutely untrue rumors have been re ceived of a few resignations and these are being dealt with since this statement was issued a dis patch was received by the Chicago ex aminer from curragh camp dated march 21 at 2 a m as follows ultimatum was sent an ultimatum has been received at curragh barracks from the war office to the effect that any officers not pre pared to serve against ulster must im mediately send in their resignations or be dismissed from the service about 100 officers have already sent in their resig nations the cavalry regiments will be the chief sufferers from this cause the appalling gravity of the situation is apparent from the fact that the gov ernment bas taken the initiative and drafted troops from the south to various strategic points in ulster the greatest activity prevails among the troops ln dublin and at curragh troops are being poured into ulster as fast as pos sible some are being embarked in war ships ln dublin bay it is stated that a battleship and two cruisers have been ordered to proceed from plymouth to belfast lough the military movements are being di rected by field marshal sir john french chief of the imperial general staff await signal for war at the present moment one spark will inflame the whole of ulster whose volun teers have long since received the order to be ready for instant action these volunteers are now waiting according to a well-informed correspondent for the firing of two rockets over the head quarters of the provisional government in belfast as a signal to take up their arms the necessary spark may well be caused by the advertised intention of the na tionalist volunteers to hold a general parade in londonderry on saturday after noon the men have been called to as semble in waterloo square the scene of the serious outbreak last august john redmond on hearing of this pro posed muster sent word to-day to the in stigators imploring them to cancel the parade it said i feel it my duty to warn you that my colleagues and i regard such proceed ings as calculated to inflict the gravest injury on the nationalist cause as play ing the game of our bitterest enemies and as affording them a pretext for which they are eagerly looking although field marshal french is di recting the military movements the ac tual operation and direction of the troops is in the hands o^peneral s^arthur pa tolls bill is cowardly say resolutions adopted at mass meeting in n y xew yore march 20 â€” these resolutions were adopted ty a mass meetinf on citizens in carnegie hall to-night 77ihereas the panama canal has been built upon american soil v by american energy and paid for by the money of the american taxpayer and is therelore an american waterway and * * * 77ihereas this waterway is subject exclusively to the sovereignty v and jurisdiction of the united states and the american con gress has provided that it shall be open to the commerce of the world upon fair and reasonable terms and has exempted from tolls american coastwise trade with which under existing laws foreign nations can not compete and Â« Â« Â« 77ihereas great britain has demanded the repeal of this law which w involves solely a regulation of domestic commerce and bases its demand upon the hay-pauncefote treaty notwithstanding the facts thai that treaty was made on the understanding that the canal should be built in territory alien to the united states and that since that time the united states has acquired by purchase from the republic of panama the rights of sovereignty over the territory through which the canal has been constructed and * * * 77ihereas the british claim if recognized involves not only the v surrender by the united states of sovereignty over its own terri tory and of the right to regulate its own domestic commerce but also the assertion of an anglo-american control over the canal and 77ihereas the present administration at washington has refused v to maintain the american right and has constituted itself the champion of the british claim as set forth in the protest of sir edward grey and advocates the complete repudiation of the attitude assumed by the last administration in reference to the canal therefore be it Â« * * resolved that we citizens of new york in mass meeting assem bled in carnegie hall denounce the proposal to repeal the free toils provision in the panama canal act in compliance with the de mand or protest of aiy foreign power as an unjustifiable surrender of american rights in the panama canal and an unwarranted abdication of american sovereignty over american territory ft ft ft resolved that we denounce it as a breach of the monroe doc trine carrying with it by implication the recognition of the british claim that the canal is an international body and not an american waterway and the admission that it should in the future be subject to anglo american control ft 4 ft resolved that we denounce as intolerable to patriotic american citizens the attitude or suggestion that the exemption of coastwise trade is anything but a regulation of domestic commerce or that the policy to te adopted in reference to such commerce should be deter mined or affected by any power but the united states alone resolved that we commend the course of james a o'gorman united states senator from new york and the other senators and representatives who have courageously opposed the proposed repeal and commend them for placing loyalty to their country above obedi ence to party leaders who although acting contrary to the platform of their party now seek to coerce the legislative branch of the govern ment into a surrender of american rights * ft * ' resolved that we call upon the representatives from the state o new york regardless of party divisions to stand by the ex clusive right of the american people and the american government to decide for themselves a question that vitally affects the commercial interests of this chief american port ft ft ft resolved that a copy of these resolutions be sent to each house of congress and to the president and finally be it * * ft resolved that we call upon the congress of the united states to repudiate decisively these insolent demands of a foreign power and to stand like adamant against all attempts thus to surrender the vital interests of our country whether these attempts be made by anotner branch of the government betrayed into panic by cleverly in spired fears of imaginary dangers or suggested by those whose snob bish subserviency to certain foreign opinion makes them as it made the tories of the days of the revolution and as it makes the ambassa dor of to-day look upon english claims as superior to american rights and who seek in every controversy that arises between the two coun tries to serve england by the betrayal of america plot charged by vopicka friends wife declares he couldn't boast of 12 shirt as he never had one the defenders of the diplomatic good repute of charles j vopicka rallied yes terday in two battalions one division was devoted to the proposition that mr vopicka never would go gadding around europe telling kings and queens about the price of his shirt the other division np less ardent in defense of the minister from Chicago to the balkans simply but doggedly maintalued that vopicka never had a 12 shirt any way this second division was led by no less a person than mrs vopicka i don't know anything about what charley may have been telling the queen of bulgaria or the king of anything said mrs vopicka last night but i do know that it is against his principles to misrepresent the truth and the truth is that he never bad a 12 shirt in his life the hosts of the defenders were meet ing ln all parts of Chicago yesterday sometimes by accident sometime by de sign and when they met one of them would declare he never said it the other would say ho never owned one john r palandoeh editor of the united servian and the balkan world and a close friend of mr vopicka declared the reports were part ol â€¢ studied attempt to discredit him wilson wants to wink at people president in talk on himself says he would like to tip off the public washington march 20 woodrow wilson to-day told the members of the national press club of washington how he looked upon woodrow wilson chief executive of the united states the ad dress was intended to be strictly con fidential but it was of such an unusual nature that it was later given out for publication the president said i tremble to think of the variety and falseness of the impressions i make it being borne in mo so that it may change my very disposition that i am a cold and removed person with a think ing machine which is detached from my real self i never think of myself as the pres ident of the united states i feel like a person appointed for a certain length of time to administer that office and i feel just as much outside of it at this moment as i did before i was elected to it i can hardly refrain every now and then from tipping the public the wink as much as to say it is only me that is inside the thing i know that when i get out of the office presently i will look just my own proper self and i know that for the time being the proportions are somewhat refracted and misrepre sented to the eye oue means by which i forget the many precedents vf hlch surround me is i to get a rattling good detective story get after soi^e imaginary offender and chase bim all over wilson's tollstanq denounced in n.y city vast crowd in carnegie hall cheers speakers when they say sop thrown to great bri tain is betrayal of america canal is ours says justice seabury and we ought to have say regarding policy respecting our own ships new tork march 20 a strong pro test against tho united states surrender ing to great britain's demand that amer ican ships be forced to pay tolls ln using the panama canal was voiced in a buge mass meeting of citizens to-night at car negie hall in impassioned eloquence the speakers reflecting the sentiment of the vast as semblage called upon president wilson and congress to stand firm against eng land's effort to bring about the repeal of the exemption clause for american ships ln the panama canal law vigorous resolutions were passed sever ly condemning england's attempt to trample the spirit of the monroe dm trine a sharp fling was taken at a i bassador page for seeking to . sen | england by the betrayal of america i the president's policy of try.-.i j throw a sop to great britain hy yicwi america's rights on its own canal n roundly denounced both in the resol tions and ln the speeches crowd cheers speakers the immense meeting fraught with so much importance in its possible effect upon the action of congress was uotaoie not alone ln the trend of the speeches but ln the temper of the audience car negie hall was filled to the topmost gal lery when the speakers twisted the british lion's tall the crowd howled with delight when the way was sternly pointed to the lawmaxers ln washington the throng evidenced its sympathy by rousing cheers supreme court jusuce samuel seabury chairman of the gathering caught the spirit of the occasion at the start when be exclaimed we are americans and we want to convince congress that we consider the panama canal as ours justice seabnry plunged into the heart of bis talk and exposition of the theory that as the united states has built the canal through territory acquired by lti own money be felt that the united states ought to have the say regarding the policy respecting its own ships calls britain adacious after justice seabury came charles b littlefleld of maine formerly a member of congress balnbridge colby progres sive leader and w bourke cod-ran early ln his speech justice seabury in derisive tone spoke of the attitude of the congressional committee on panama canal tolls in regarding the canal as an international waterway international waterway asked jus uce seabury why lt was dug by the united states and with its own money it belongs outright to the united states and as such this country is free to exempt its own ships as it sees fit the allusion to the attitude of thc congressional committee was hissed when justice seabury stamped as an audacity england's attempt to invoke the hay-pauncefote treaty as applying to the panama canal the throng abandoned itself to cheers that shook the galleries wilson policy causes disgust justice seabury brought forth another burst of applause when in discussing tho hay-pauncefote treaty he maintained that lt would be just as applicable to a canal built from san francisco to new orleans as to the panama canal shall we adopt an anglo-american ca nal policy demanded the justice almost hissing his words never never came the nanlcioiis reply when justice seabury finis he . . sheaf of telegrams from promlneut men the country over was read all pressing u deep disgust over the administration's policy in the tolls matter and urging that for the sake of true americanism the repeal of the exemption law be aban doned among the telegrams were one trom governor lister of washington ho ad verted to the blow the repeal of tolls fo american ships will strike to the westers producers former governoi c rdin c-ufornia william r wbeeldtof out ban francisco chamber of tamers continued on wj patam this morning's examiner is an important fore taste of the offerings in the good stores and shops in Chicago of women's and men's eas ter wearing apparel the styles have changed and it is worth while following the examiner columns closely every day > golden sunshine j and real gold this is the time of the year when everyone is longing for the golden sunshine of sum mer but there is no time of the year when people > do not want real gold * to-morrow the examiner is again going to give away fifty dollars in gold in the want ad i letter contest that is creating unequaled inter est and enthusiasm throughout the whole central 5 west t write a letter about the ad that most appeals p to you in sunday's examiner and win the money r that will take you and your children into the p country for a whole day of golden sunshine Â£ there are other attractive prizes theater tickets and martha washington candies for lucky c winners iir this contest go in and get one of them f for full particulars of this contest see to morrow's want ad section Chicago and vicinity â€” in c creasing cloudiness saturday with f fft-^scs probably light snow flurries by j|jk y~y2 night sunday cloudy and colder iivujh s range of temperatures yesterday bb i â– ~ highest 32 v|fl â€¢* nttr a lowest 20 i ib auzzaeo,sa average 26 v â€” -** ---Â«-Â» â€¢ r i

Chicago examiner vol xii no 77 a m saturday Chicago march 21 1914 saturday registered ln v s patent office price one cent jjs&ftÃŸff cabman says he hauled mrs hemmen into country she told him to wait and then disappeared into a deep ravine and failed to return driver tells waukegan police recognizes missing woman's picture in examiner woods searched by lantern light husband offers 100 reward for the first time since the widespread search for mrs job hemmen wife of a photographer of waukegan 111 began after her disappearance last tuesday fl tangible clew was given yesterday that may result in disclosing her fate the clew came from james dodds a waukegan cabman who recognized a pic ture of mrs hemmcu published in the Chicago examiner and asserted positively that she was a passenger in bis cab last tuesday he said he took her at her re quest to a lonely spot northwest of thc village where she left the cab and dis appeared into a wild and wooded ravine the story of dodds roused every one ln waukegan to a keen pitch of interest to-day practically the entire population will engage in a search of the ravine und adjacent country it will be a holiday in waukegan to-day and au school chil dren will aid in the search as will mem bers of the national guard the police and hundreds of citizens additional interest was given to the search by au offer of 100 reward by mr heminen for the recovery of bis wife dead or alive anticipating the search planned for o-day mr hemmen fire chief sars o'farrell and two other waukegan citi rens last night searched the raviue with he aid of lanterns but without result tecognizes picture in examiner dodds who told his story first yester day to au examiner reporter excused his failure to speak of it before by saying that he rarely read newspapers and did not realize until he saw the picture in the examiner that the missing woman being sought was his passenger of last tuesday i was at clayton street and sheridan road at 3:30 tuesday he said when the woman i now know must have been mrs hemmen came out into the street end signalled me to stop she said she wanted me to take her to sexton's north gate one of the gates to p jl sexton's farm about a mile from the point where i met mrs hemmen i took her there end she gave me a quarter and said " stay here lor about half uu hour nnd i'll be back i want you to take me hack home sid not seem excited the woman did not appear at all ex ited or seem troubled she talked in an rdinary tone and i took the quarter and at down to wait i thought she was oing into sexton's for something but he did uot enter the farm gate she went past it and down the road 1 watched her wondering whore she was oi__.g she went down the roadway as ar as ike pyriue's spring and then turned westward and walked into a wooded ravine and disappeared behiud a clump of bushes the next day i beard that a woman was missing but i never connected this lrcumstance with my fare of the day jeforc besides i nus not feeling well and it was all i could do to work i did not hear the name of the woman wednes day and it was not until i picked up the examiner to-day and saw mrs ileminen's icture that i knew my passenger of i'uesday must be she i don't believe here is any doubt to-morrow 1 will take the police to the poiut where she disappeared 14 claim 90 found flying about in loop fourteen persons claim uo found wednesday at randolph and state â– streets and turned over to city cus | todian cregicr as a result mr cregler i has appealed to corporation counsel sex " ton foi help i carried 127 ln my handkerchief bald mrs murthu neville of 3328 west m thirty-seventh place i blew my nose r and the money went up in the air she and the other thirteen were re ferred to the corporation counsel miss pankhurst talks from an ambulance special cable to the examiner london march 20 sylvia pankhurst appeared at a su_frai_et meeting to-night nd was enthusiastically received she joked pale and haggard and was forceil to remain on a cot iu an ambulance while rihe delivered her speech ln the liinehousc district the militant was attended by two nurses one of whom administered stimulants to miss rant-hurst before and after the speech prince troubetski dying in poverty forgotten by family is starving in berlin sp?sia cable to the examiner berlin march 20 prince zubel troubclski a revolutionary scion of one of the oldest and most distinguished euro pean families is dying here of con sumption he is forgotten by his rela tives and friends und for weeks has been living here under an assumed name he is now practically penniless and fre quently suffers from lack of food he is a cousin of prince paul troubetskl the famous sculptor who is now in the united states and of prince rierrc troubetskl a fnmous painter eliot 80 spends day at work in his study reception for relatives marks birthday of ex-head of harvard boston mass march 20 dr charles w eliot president emeritus of harvard university eighty years old to-day ob served the anniversary by holding a re ception for relatives in his borne in cam bridge mrs eliot who received mes sages of congratulation throughout the day said her husband was well that be would spend the day at home and that he was busy in his study as is bis custom when home alabama governor accused of graft convicted prison official says o'neil got 27,500 of loot montgomery ala march 20.â€”theo dore lacy convicted of embezzling state i funds while in the employ of the state â– convict department issued a statement : to-day invol-lng governor o'neil mr oakley president of the convict board did give me 27,500 in cash in may or june 1911 the statement reads ; governor o'neil got that 27,500 irom me that day governor o'neil never re ; turned this money or any other money j as far as i know hattie johnson once opera star dies was member of famous mccall or ganization 25 years ago milford mass march 20 marie lansen sixty-five years old comic opera favorite of twenty-five years ago died to day at the home of her brother-in-law after a brief illness she was known on the stage as hattie johnson she was born in boston and was a popular mem ber of the famous mccall organization with francis wilson dewolf hopper ferugini de angelis and herbert wilke bavaria government boycotts standard oil special cable to the examiner berlin march 20 the bavarian gov ernment has boycotted the standard oil company by forbidding the use of the oil manufactured and sold by the trust in i any automobile owned or used by the government or for any other purpose all government departments must return sworn statements monthly that they have not used auj of the standard oil com pany's products dr shaw challenges men to go to mexico new york march 20 why don't men go down to mexico and recover the mutilated bodies desecrated by the mexi cans asked dr anna 11 shaw to-night in a suffrage meeting at erasmus hall high school flatbush dr shaw put her question after saying one of the main arguments against woman suffrage was that women lacked fighting intel lect husband hurls acid 0n wife ends own life i jeweler drinks acid on street car and crowd watches dying struggle woman runs to hospital attacked when she refused tc return home after being separated walter r karant former owner of a jewelry store at 3225 armitage avenue committed suicide last night on an ogden avenue car by swallowing sulphuric acid he killed himself after throwing the contents of a bottle of acid into the face of his wife ljurning her so badly i that she may lose the sight of both of her eyes karant and bis wife have been scp aratcd for two mouths he met her by i appointment last night at the corner of j lincoln street and ogden avenue and begged her to return with him to their home 1206 north homan avenue wheu mrs karant refused he pulled the bottle from his pocket and threw the contents in her face slips from seat dead mrs karant screaming with pain ran to the university hospital at dot south lincoln street karant ran into the street and boarded an ogden avenue car he walked into the car and sat down wheu the car reached madison street he slipped from his seat to the floor dead karant's body was removed to the berz undertaking rooms at 1507 west madison street where his identity was established by papers in his pockets a note addressed to whom it may con cern read my wife is the cause of this she drove me to the end the police did not connect thc two tragedies until the patrol wagon which had been sent to the university hospital returned to the lake street station the police who had been sent out on this case returned with mrs karant's story wife tells of attack my husband and i separated two months ago she told them he owned a jewelry store at 3223 armitage avenue a week after our separation he sold the store i went to a rooming house at 192g west jackson boulevard where i have since lived i obtained employment ln the county hospital as a junior nurse my husband begged me repeatedly to see him but i refused until to-night he begged me to come back to him i told him i could not and that i was prepar ing to file suit for divorce he pulled a bottle from his pocket and threw the contents in my face 25,000 verdict for oscar hammerstein singer sued by impresario must pay damages for broken contract new york march 20 supreme court justice platzke to-day directed a verdict of 25,000 against florenclo constantino und in favor of oscar hammorstein hammersteln alleges that constantino broke his contract to sing exclusively for him during the seasons of 1908-10 the verdict may be increased by 5,000 if a penalty provided in the contract is en forced constantino testifed the impresario had failed to abide by his agreement to feature him constantino in certain ad vertisements he also stated hammer steln had snubbed bim when he tried to meet him ln paris and new york mile dorny nude on stage paris applauds actress then comes before curtain and s hissed special cable to the examiner paris march 20 mile dorny the actress appeared totally nude iu a pro duction ot u dramatization of pierre i.outi's aphrodite at the renaissance theater this week she did it so grace fully and with such modesty that the audience applauded Â„ after the curtain fell the applause was so great that mile dorny made the mis take of coming out before the curtain iu the same absence of costume then in stead of applause there were hisses and angry murmurings bride refused to ride husband stole rig girl taken home by parents man flees gives self up a guilty conscience and an aching heart led robert mckay of new castle pa to give himself up to the police of the cen tral station yesterday please arrest me he said to an is tonished sergeant at state and van bu ren streets i stole a horse and buggy you see i married a girl in new castle a month ago she loved mc but her father and mother interfered and took her away from me then i hired a horse and buggy to take her out riding when she refused i was so angry i sold the outfit for 13 and bought a ticket or Chicago now i want to go back mckay is being held pending confirma tion of his story ex-newsgirl sues millionaire husband bill declares frank morton bates is drug victim taunton mass march 20 mrs nan carrigan bates former newsgirl at the hotel astor new york now the wife of the millionaire jewelry manufacturer frank morton bates of attleooro has sued for divorce alleging cruelty gross and confirmed intoxication from opium und other drugs and wanton neglect when in boston on her honeymoon mrs bates declared wealth without love was empty and that she had married for love sinclair quits arden because of snubs orders bungalow sold and will stay in bermuda wilmington del march 20 upton sinclair and his second wife have left arden forever because of thc snubs tbey have received they have decided to re main in bermuda this was learned to day when the author sent orders that his bungalow ln arden be sold for the reason that i do not want to return there the snubbing followed sinclair's refusal to pay a flue for playing baseball on sunday and his consequent imprisonment henry h rogers jr charged with fraud son of late oil head accused in case of home for cripples new york march 20 the appel late division to-day declared henry h rogers jr son of the late head of the standard oil company guilty of a fraud against the messiah home for crippled children reversing justice quintan's de cision that the home in suing rogers had no case rogers fraud was in claim ing to hold a mortgage for 000,000 against the home which was given by the late mr and mrs h h rogers to the church of the messiah the matter will now go to trial alton b parker sues to recover 5,376 charges two defendants gave him worthless note for sum new york march 20 alton b park er former nominee of the democratic party for president to-day started a su preme court action to recover 5,376 from gilbert f kennedy und david kennedy parker alleges he was given a note for this amount in 1008 payable on demand the note was secured by stock in the lincoln mining company when he at tempetd to sell the security he found it bad no market value congressman tries to impeach judge lack of quorum prevents action on sensational charge washington march 20 at the mo ment of the adjournment of the house to-night representative j frank park of georgia made u vain effort to impeach associate justice daniel thew wright of the district of columbia supremo court the effort caused a sensation among the seventy-five members present park charged justice wright with high crimes and misdemeanors because of lack of a quorum the house adjourned leaving open park's resolution for action to-morrow 100 ulster officers quit wait war signal civil conflict threatens great britain in few hours 10,000 troops are rushed to scene to meet outbreak in ireland government also to send war ship fleet unionists stirred to striking point at presence of soldiers along the border special cable to the examiner belfast march 20 1 a m there is an ominous lull before the storm belfast is quiet to-night new and greatly strengthened guards of ulster volunteers have been thrown around craig-avon where sir edward carson is passing the night as the guest of captain craig m p his chief lieutenant belfast volunteers have been or dered to report themselves at their respective battalion headquarters this afternoon additional govern ment troops are arriving almost hourly from dublin no man knows what the next hour may bring special cable to the examiner london march 20 the latest report received in london to-night from ire land indicated there was practically no doubt that a most critical situation ex ists in ulster and that the next forty eight hours may make history that wilt thrill the whole civilized world the dally mail to-night received from its correspondent at the curragh of kil dare the following message all of the cavalry officers at the cur ragh garrison resigned to-day when this message was submitted to the war office an official reply was made as follows the statement ln this form is abso lutely untrue rumors have been re ceived of a few resignations and these are being dealt with since this statement was issued a dis patch was received by the Chicago ex aminer from curragh camp dated march 21 at 2 a m as follows ultimatum was sent an ultimatum has been received at curragh barracks from the war office to the effect that any officers not pre pared to serve against ulster must im mediately send in their resignations or be dismissed from the service about 100 officers have already sent in their resig nations the cavalry regiments will be the chief sufferers from this cause the appalling gravity of the situation is apparent from the fact that the gov ernment bas taken the initiative and drafted troops from the south to various strategic points in ulster the greatest activity prevails among the troops ln dublin and at curragh troops are being poured into ulster as fast as pos sible some are being embarked in war ships ln dublin bay it is stated that a battleship and two cruisers have been ordered to proceed from plymouth to belfast lough the military movements are being di rected by field marshal sir john french chief of the imperial general staff await signal for war at the present moment one spark will inflame the whole of ulster whose volun teers have long since received the order to be ready for instant action these volunteers are now waiting according to a well-informed correspondent for the firing of two rockets over the head quarters of the provisional government in belfast as a signal to take up their arms the necessary spark may well be caused by the advertised intention of the na tionalist volunteers to hold a general parade in londonderry on saturday after noon the men have been called to as semble in waterloo square the scene of the serious outbreak last august john redmond on hearing of this pro posed muster sent word to-day to the in stigators imploring them to cancel the parade it said i feel it my duty to warn you that my colleagues and i regard such proceed ings as calculated to inflict the gravest injury on the nationalist cause as play ing the game of our bitterest enemies and as affording them a pretext for which they are eagerly looking although field marshal french is di recting the military movements the ac tual operation and direction of the troops is in the hands o^peneral s^arthur pa tolls bill is cowardly say resolutions adopted at mass meeting in n y xew yore march 20 â€” these resolutions were adopted ty a mass meetinf on citizens in carnegie hall to-night 77ihereas the panama canal has been built upon american soil v by american energy and paid for by the money of the american taxpayer and is therelore an american waterway and * * * 77ihereas this waterway is subject exclusively to the sovereignty v and jurisdiction of the united states and the american con gress has provided that it shall be open to the commerce of the world upon fair and reasonable terms and has exempted from tolls american coastwise trade with which under existing laws foreign nations can not compete and Â« Â« Â« 77ihereas great britain has demanded the repeal of this law which w involves solely a regulation of domestic commerce and bases its demand upon the hay-pauncefote treaty notwithstanding the facts thai that treaty was made on the understanding that the canal should be built in territory alien to the united states and that since that time the united states has acquired by purchase from the republic of panama the rights of sovereignty over the territory through which the canal has been constructed and * * * 77ihereas the british claim if recognized involves not only the v surrender by the united states of sovereignty over its own terri tory and of the right to regulate its own domestic commerce but also the assertion of an anglo-american control over the canal and 77ihereas the present administration at washington has refused v to maintain the american right and has constituted itself the champion of the british claim as set forth in the protest of sir edward grey and advocates the complete repudiation of the attitude assumed by the last administration in reference to the canal therefore be it Â« * * resolved that we citizens of new york in mass meeting assem bled in carnegie hall denounce the proposal to repeal the free toils provision in the panama canal act in compliance with the de mand or protest of aiy foreign power as an unjustifiable surrender of american rights in the panama canal and an unwarranted abdication of american sovereignty over american territory ft ft ft resolved that we denounce it as a breach of the monroe doc trine carrying with it by implication the recognition of the british claim that the canal is an international body and not an american waterway and the admission that it should in the future be subject to anglo american control ft 4 ft resolved that we denounce as intolerable to patriotic american citizens the attitude or suggestion that the exemption of coastwise trade is anything but a regulation of domestic commerce or that the policy to te adopted in reference to such commerce should be deter mined or affected by any power but the united states alone resolved that we commend the course of james a o'gorman united states senator from new york and the other senators and representatives who have courageously opposed the proposed repeal and commend them for placing loyalty to their country above obedi ence to party leaders who although acting contrary to the platform of their party now seek to coerce the legislative branch of the govern ment into a surrender of american rights * ft * ' resolved that we call upon the representatives from the state o new york regardless of party divisions to stand by the ex clusive right of the american people and the american government to decide for themselves a question that vitally affects the commercial interests of this chief american port ft ft ft resolved that a copy of these resolutions be sent to each house of congress and to the president and finally be it * * ft resolved that we call upon the congress of the united states to repudiate decisively these insolent demands of a foreign power and to stand like adamant against all attempts thus to surrender the vital interests of our country whether these attempts be made by anotner branch of the government betrayed into panic by cleverly in spired fears of imaginary dangers or suggested by those whose snob bish subserviency to certain foreign opinion makes them as it made the tories of the days of the revolution and as it makes the ambassa dor of to-day look upon english claims as superior to american rights and who seek in every controversy that arises between the two coun tries to serve england by the betrayal of america plot charged by vopicka friends wife declares he couldn't boast of 12 shirt as he never had one the defenders of the diplomatic good repute of charles j vopicka rallied yes terday in two battalions one division was devoted to the proposition that mr vopicka never would go gadding around europe telling kings and queens about the price of his shirt the other division np less ardent in defense of the minister from Chicago to the balkans simply but doggedly maintalued that vopicka never had a 12 shirt any way this second division was led by no less a person than mrs vopicka i don't know anything about what charley may have been telling the queen of bulgaria or the king of anything said mrs vopicka last night but i do know that it is against his principles to misrepresent the truth and the truth is that he never bad a 12 shirt in his life the hosts of the defenders were meet ing ln all parts of Chicago yesterday sometimes by accident sometime by de sign and when they met one of them would declare he never said it the other would say ho never owned one john r palandoeh editor of the united servian and the balkan world and a close friend of mr vopicka declared the reports were part ol â€¢ studied attempt to discredit him wilson wants to wink at people president in talk on himself says he would like to tip off the public washington march 20 woodrow wilson to-day told the members of the national press club of washington how he looked upon woodrow wilson chief executive of the united states the ad dress was intended to be strictly con fidential but it was of such an unusual nature that it was later given out for publication the president said i tremble to think of the variety and falseness of the impressions i make it being borne in mo so that it may change my very disposition that i am a cold and removed person with a think ing machine which is detached from my real self i never think of myself as the pres ident of the united states i feel like a person appointed for a certain length of time to administer that office and i feel just as much outside of it at this moment as i did before i was elected to it i can hardly refrain every now and then from tipping the public the wink as much as to say it is only me that is inside the thing i know that when i get out of the office presently i will look just my own proper self and i know that for the time being the proportions are somewhat refracted and misrepre sented to the eye oue means by which i forget the many precedents vf hlch surround me is i to get a rattling good detective story get after soi^e imaginary offender and chase bim all over wilson's tollstanq denounced in n.y city vast crowd in carnegie hall cheers speakers when they say sop thrown to great bri tain is betrayal of america canal is ours says justice seabury and we ought to have say regarding policy respecting our own ships new tork march 20 a strong pro test against tho united states surrender ing to great britain's demand that amer ican ships be forced to pay tolls ln using the panama canal was voiced in a buge mass meeting of citizens to-night at car negie hall in impassioned eloquence the speakers reflecting the sentiment of the vast as semblage called upon president wilson and congress to stand firm against eng land's effort to bring about the repeal of the exemption clause for american ships ln the panama canal law vigorous resolutions were passed sever ly condemning england's attempt to trample the spirit of the monroe dm trine a sharp fling was taken at a i bassador page for seeking to . sen | england by the betrayal of america i the president's policy of try.-.i j throw a sop to great britain hy yicwi america's rights on its own canal n roundly denounced both in the resol tions and ln the speeches crowd cheers speakers the immense meeting fraught with so much importance in its possible effect upon the action of congress was uotaoie not alone ln the trend of the speeches but ln the temper of the audience car negie hall was filled to the topmost gal lery when the speakers twisted the british lion's tall the crowd howled with delight when the way was sternly pointed to the lawmaxers ln washington the throng evidenced its sympathy by rousing cheers supreme court jusuce samuel seabury chairman of the gathering caught the spirit of the occasion at the start when be exclaimed we are americans and we want to convince congress that we consider the panama canal as ours justice seabnry plunged into the heart of bis talk and exposition of the theory that as the united states has built the canal through territory acquired by lti own money be felt that the united states ought to have the say regarding the policy respecting its own ships calls britain adacious after justice seabury came charles b littlefleld of maine formerly a member of congress balnbridge colby progres sive leader and w bourke cod-ran early ln his speech justice seabury in derisive tone spoke of the attitude of the congressional committee on panama canal tolls in regarding the canal as an international waterway international waterway asked jus uce seabury why lt was dug by the united states and with its own money it belongs outright to the united states and as such this country is free to exempt its own ships as it sees fit the allusion to the attitude of thc congressional committee was hissed when justice seabury stamped as an audacity england's attempt to invoke the hay-pauncefote treaty as applying to the panama canal the throng abandoned itself to cheers that shook the galleries wilson policy causes disgust justice seabury brought forth another burst of applause when in discussing tho hay-pauncefote treaty he maintained that lt would be just as applicable to a canal built from san francisco to new orleans as to the panama canal shall we adopt an anglo-american ca nal policy demanded the justice almost hissing his words never never came the nanlcioiis reply when justice seabury finis he . . sheaf of telegrams from promlneut men the country over was read all pressing u deep disgust over the administration's policy in the tolls matter and urging that for the sake of true americanism the repeal of the exemption law be aban doned among the telegrams were one trom governor lister of washington ho ad verted to the blow the repeal of tolls fo american ships will strike to the westers producers former governoi c rdin c-ufornia william r wbeeldtof out ban francisco chamber of tamers continued on wj patam this morning's examiner is an important fore taste of the offerings in the good stores and shops in Chicago of women's and men's eas ter wearing apparel the styles have changed and it is worth while following the examiner columns closely every day > golden sunshine j and real gold this is the time of the year when everyone is longing for the golden sunshine of sum mer but there is no time of the year when people > do not want real gold * to-morrow the examiner is again going to give away fifty dollars in gold in the want ad i letter contest that is creating unequaled inter est and enthusiasm throughout the whole central 5 west t write a letter about the ad that most appeals p to you in sunday's examiner and win the money r that will take you and your children into the p country for a whole day of golden sunshine Â£ there are other attractive prizes theater tickets and martha washington candies for lucky c winners iir this contest go in and get one of them f for full particulars of this contest see to morrow's want ad section Chicago and vicinity â€” in c creasing cloudiness saturday with f fft-^scs probably light snow flurries by j|jk y~y2 night sunday cloudy and colder iivujh s range of temperatures yesterday bb i â– ~ highest 32 v|fl â€¢* nttr a lowest 20 i ib auzzaeo,sa average 26 v â€” -** ---Â«-Â» â€¢ r i